Pidswp 9302
Pidswp 9302
Pidswp 9302
in the Philippines:
Efficiency and Access Issues
Gilherto M. Uanto
June 1993
I. Introduction 1
II. Agriculture Finance and the Role of Government 3
A. The Institutional Structure for Credit Delivery 3
B. The Past and New View of Rural Finance 9
III. Impact Assessment of Credit Policies and Programs 15
A. General Status of Agricultural Credit andBanking 15
B. Assessment of Specific Programs 20
C. Overall Impact Assessment 27
IV. Policy and Institutional Reforms 30
V. Conclusion 32
References 33
Gilberto M. L lanto*
I. INTRODUCTION
Agricultural credit has an important role in the development of the agriculture sector.
Agriculture accounts for close to 30 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), about 24 percent
o f foreign-exchange earnings and 46 percent of the labor force. It sustained the economy
throughout economic and financial crisis of 1983-1986, growing by 3.1 percent in real terms
while industrial growth declined by 7 percent. In 1987-1991, agriculture has been a steady
source of growth for the economy. However, agriculture’s relative use of formal credit is much
lower than that of the non— agricultural sector which absorbed a much higher level of credit
per peso value of output. Agriculture has had a small and, lately, declining share of total bank
loans: 9.7 percent in 1985 and 5.2 percent in 1991 (Table 1). In 1985-1991, the average ratio
of agricultural loan to gross value added (GVA) in agriculture was 23 percent, while it averaged
around 34.3 percent in 1980-1983 (Table 2). The bulk of agricultural loans, which was supplied
by the commercial banking system, was absorbed by commercial agriculture. Small-scale and
subsistence agriculture sourced their loans mostly from informal lenders. With adequate
financing the sector could have performed better. But, as the Asian Development Bank (1990)
reports, the volume of institutional credit to the agriculture sector is considered inadequate and
the sector has received a much smaller share of formal credit than the non-agricultural sector.
Credit is important because economic agents in the agricultural sector who suffer from
a cash-flow problem and a liquidity constraint may produce sub-optimal inputs use and,
therefore, output (Khandker and Binswanger 1989). This paper reviews past and present
agricultural credit and banking policies in the Philippines. It identifies the principal issues in
rural credit markets and discusses the present status of agriculture finance and the government’s
current role in rural credit markets.
It is organized into four sections. Section I introduces the issues. Section II discusses the
status of agriculture finance and the institutional structure for credit delivery to agriculture. It
explains the present agricultural credit policy in the context of the previous approach of
*This paper, presented at the "Symposium on Rural Development and Self-Reliance in the Philippines" sponsored
by the Institute of Developing Economies (March 17, 1993), is a revised version of an earlier paper "Agricultural Credit
and Banking in the Philippines: Past Experience, Present Views and Policies" which was presented to the Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) Regional Expert Consultation on Policies and Programmes Relating to Agricultural
Credit and Banking in Bangkok, Thailand, 23-27 November 1992.
Research Fellow, Philippine Institute for Development Studies and the Social Weather Stations, Inc. Dr. Llanto
is the former Executive Director of the Agricultural Credit Policy Council, Department o f Agriculture.
2
3
providing subsidized credit to the agriculture sector and describes the role of government in
the new agricultural credit framework. Section III is an impact assessment of the agricultural
credit programs and discusses the main issues arising from the current agricultural credit policy,
especially in relation to the new government approach of using non-bank financial institutions
like credit cooperatives to deliver credit to the countryside. Section IV summarizes the findings
and conclusions of the paper and provides some policy recommendations. The paper does not
discuss lending to commercial agriculture which has easier access to bank resources; rather, it
focuses on the credit problems affecting smallholder agriculture.
The formal sector is composed of the commercial banks, thrift and development banks,
the rural banks and the credit-guarantee institutions. The informal sector, composed of the
informal moneylenders (such as traders, millers, large farmers, friends, relatives, landowners
and, recently, overseas contract workers), the credit unions and credit cooperatives, rotating
savings and loans associations, serves the financing requirements of small— scale and
subsistence agriculture and the majority of small rural borrowers. Table 3 gives a summary of
the main functions of the formal institutions, the types of ownership, their clientele and the
sources of funds. Commercial agriculture, consisting of both medium and large-scale individual
and corporate borrowers, is served by all types of banks in the formal sector. An emerging
important institution is the credit guarantee institution.
The CALF is managed by the Agricultural Credit Policy Council (ACPC) of the
Department of Agriculture which oversees the credit*guarantee operations of these institutions
and pays the guarantee calls submitted by banks through the PCIC, Quedancor and GFSME.
The banks supply the loans to borrowers who have the option to seek guarantee cover from any
of the three operating institutions of the CALF. The credit guarantee covers up to a maximum
of 85 percent of the total loan amount. When the borrower defaults, the bank can claim from
the CALF a reimbursement of the outstanding loan up to this maximum amount.
4
(1) the traditional moneylenders (traders, millers, landowners and big farmers); and
(2) organizations or groupings (credit unions, credit cooperatives, rotating savings and
credit associations).
We must also point out that the formal and informal sectors do not act in isolation of
each other. The informal lenders access bank credit which they in turn relend to small rural
borrowers. The Land Bank of the Philippines, for example, uses cooperatives and some selected
foundations and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) as credit channels. The Land Bank
wholesales the loans to these channels which retail the loans to member-borrowers.
Moneylenders —like traders, millers and big farmers —also borrow their loanable funds from
rural financial institutions for retail credit to their small farmer clients.
The government banks involved in agricultural and rural credit are the Land Bank and
the Development Bank of the Philippines. The Philippine National Bank, formerly a wholly
owned government bank, has been substantially privatised. It now has a more commercial
orientation and will not be very much involved in smallholder agriculture.
The policymaking and regulatory bodies of the rural financial system are composed of
several government agencies. The Central Bank of the Philippines provides the overall guidance
for monetary and credit policies and supervises and regulates the financial institutions and the
non-bank financial institutions. The Philippine Deposit Insurance Corporation insures individual
deposits up to P40,000 and has taken over from the Central Bank the rehabilitation of rural
banks. The ACPC provides policy advice on agricultural and rural credit and to manage the
CALF.
9
Supply-led Finance
For about 20 years, the Philippine government funded a number of rural sector credit
programs which attempted to provide access to formal credit at concessional or subsidized rates.
The programs were to encourage small farmers to adopt new technology to increase farm
yields and to offset the policy biases against agriculture. Various incentives and regulatory
schemes such as credit quotas, deposit retention schemes and highly subsidized loans from the
rediscounting window o f the Central Bank were part of this approach. Interest rates on deposits
and loans were regulated. For loans, the ceiling was 12 percent for supervised credit and 14
percent for non-supervised credit. For deposits, the ceiling was 6 percent for savings and 6.5
to 8 percent for time. Agricultural activities enjoyed preferential rediscounting both in terms
of loan value and interest rate. The rediscount rate for agricultural loans was 1 percent for
supervised credit and 5 percent for non-supervised credit. Special time deposits for rural
financial institutions were given at 3 percent interest rate. A loan quota under the Agri-Agra
Law mandated banks to set aside 25 percent of net loanable funds to agriculture, of which 10
percent was for agrarian reform beneficiaries and 15 percent for agriculture. The deposit
retention scheme required that at least 75 percent of total deposits mobilized by branches,
extension offices and head offices of banks would be invested in the region where the deposits
were generated. The private rural banks were used mainly as conduits of cheap loans from
special time deposits and the rediscount window of the Central Bank.
The expected access to bank credit by small borrowers did not materialize except in
cases that the government was willing to provide credit subsidies to banks. Even then, the
supply of formal agricultural credit declined from a level of 18 percent of total bank loans in
1966 to only 5 percent in 1975 and less than 10 percent in 1985. Various surveys conducted
by the Technical Board for Agricultural Credit (the forerunner of ACPC) also showed that the
proportion of farmers who borrowed from banks decreased from 37 percent in 1967-1974 to 23
percent in 1981-1986. Worse, credit subsidies were largely captured by formal lenders and not
by the farmer-borrowers (Esguerra 1981) while savings mobilization was neglected as rural
banks depended on the Central Bank for over half of their loanable funds (Neri and Llanto
1985). The government’s agricultural credit program was fragmented into 46 separate
commodity-targeted programs which led to inefficient and wasteful use of credit resources and
the subsequent impairment of the rural banking system because of high past dues and low
repayments. Out of 1,167 rural banks in 1981, only 856 were operational by 1986, of which
82 percent were in arrears with the Central Bank.
The failure of the supply-led approach in the Philippines is not a unique experience.
Braverman and Guasch (1989) observed that despite the expansion of targeted credit programs
in developing countries, only a small fraction of the farmers seemed to have benefited. They
estimated that only about 5 percent of farms in Africa and 15 percent in Asia and Latin America
received such formal credit. Moreover, these targeted credit programs seemed to have worsened
already inequitable income distributions when only 5 percent of borrowers received 80 percent
of the credit. One estimate of the Philippine experience showed high-income farmers receiving
68 percent o f total credit from rural banks (Neri and Llanto 1985).
Some critics comment that the past supply-led approach failed to consider the particular
nuances of rural financial markets:
In addition, the banks depended on the government’s subsidies for loanable funds and
neglected savings mobilization, the "forgotten half of rural finance" (von Pischke 1991).
Worsening the situation was the direct involvement of government line departments in the
lending process which opened avenues for political interference and corruption in credit decision
and allocation.
The Central Bank undertook financial reforms at the start of the 1980s as the financial
system was not responding efficiently to the needs of a growing and modernizing economy.
Lack of competition in the financial system and the absence of a long— term capital market
hampered economic development. Reforms eliminated interest rate ceilings on all types of
deposits and loans, stopped the Central Bank’s subsidized rediscounting facilities and required
banks to raise their minimum capital requirements.
With respect to the rural financial system, the government issued Executive Order 113
which terminated the direct lending programs by nonfinancial government agencies and
consolidated 20 agricultural credit programs into the CALF. The credit subsidies were
withdrawn and the government adopted a market-oriented rural credit policy. The private and
government banks were urged to lend out of their loanable funds to agriculture and rural
borrowers and were left to determine deposit and lending rates. Other important components
of this new rural credit policy are as follows:
(1) the emphasis on savings mobilization and financial innovations to reduce transaction costs;
(2) the recognition of people’s organizations as effective institutions for credit delivery;
(3) a more liberal bank branching policy; and
(4) the phase-out of the development banking function of the Central Bank and the transfer of
special lending programs like the Agricultural Loan Fund (ALF) and the Integrated Rural
Financing (IRF) to the Land Bank of the Philippines.
The CALF was created primarily as a credit guarantee fund to encourage banks to lend
to agriculture, especially smallholder agriculture. Rather than give subsidized credit, the
11
government now intervenes in the rural credit markets indirectly through the CALF which acts
as a risk-reducing mechanism for bank lending. The CALF provides a guarantee cover to the
extent of 85 percent of the outstanding loan. In the event of a loan default, the bank calls on
the CALF for reimbursement of 85 percent of the outstanding loan.
The liberalization of bank entry and branching policy is an important reform. Branching
regulations in the 1970s promoted the physical expansion of banks in the country; the opposite,
however, was undertaken in the 1980s which saw regulations biased against liberal bank entry
and expansion. Many areas are still without banking facilities partly because of restrictive bank
entry and branching policies of the Central Bank which are "expressed as a concern of the
Central Bank Governor about proliferation of banks and the danger of entrusting banking
responsibilities to new bankers" (Tan 1989). No new bank has been established since 1980.
Instead, mergers, consolidation and investment in existing banks, including those in economic
difficulty, are encouraged. Branching is also restricted to areas that are not "overbanked."
However, the Central Bank has recently taken steps to liberalize the licensing of new
banks and the opening of new branches. Central Bank (CB) Circular 1200 (1 6 May 1989 )
allowed the establishment of new banks and lifted the requirement to purchase special five-year
government securities as a condition to open new branches. All restrictions on opening new
branches in rural areas classified under Categories IV and V were removed. The Central Bank,
however, maintains its discretionary policy on .branching in urban and particularly in
metropolitan areas. It also allows a bank to open a new branch as long as it does not create
market-concentration problems.
A key component of the new thrusts in agricultural credit and banking policies is the
rehabilitation of the rural banks. It will be recalled that from the early 1950s to the 1970s the
Central Bank and Development Bank promoted the growth of the rural banks through various
subsidized schemes such as cheap and concessional credit through the rediscount window of the
Central Bank and the equity participation by the Development Bank in many rural banks.
However, those rural banks which greatly depended on the government’s largesse and did not
manage their respective institutions well were severely affected by the economic and financial
crisis of 1983-1985 and the subsequent withdrawal of credit subsidies. As earlier stated, in
December 1986 there were only 856 rural banks still operating of which 82 percent were in
arrears with the Central Bank. The Central Bank made several attempts to resuscitate the
moribund rural banking system, resulting in the 1987 Rural Bank Rehabilitation Program under
CB Circular 1143 (24 April 1987) as amended by CB Circulars 1158 and 1172. This
rehabilitation program intended to strengthen the rural banks through a combination of fresh
capital infusion and the rescheduling of past due obligations with the Central Bank. Table 4
shows the principal features of CB Circular 1143, as amended.
12
TABLE 4
PRINCIPAL FEATURES OF THE RURAL BANK REHABILITATION PROGRAM
1. Fresh capital infusion to achieve the minimum 10 percent risk asset ratio
2. Option for conversion of supervised credit arrears into common stock in the name of the
Land Bank o f the Philippines and/or a plan of payment with the Central Bank not exceeding
15 years
3. First'option to purchase the common shares held by the Land Bank under the conversion
scheme, under certain conditions
4. Increase in authorized capitalization
5. Forgiveness of liquidated damages and/or penalties under certain conditions
6. Restoration of rediscounting privileges
7. Exemption from equity ceiling
Table 5 shows the status of the rehabilitation program for rural banks under CB
Circulars 1143, 1158 and 1172 as of November 1992.
TABLE 5
STATUS OF APPLICATIONS UNDER CB CIRCULAR 1143, AS AMENDED
TABLE 6
FEATURES OF THE CF1EP
Module 1: Purchase of Rural Bank Arrears. This module seeks to retire some P2.8 billion of
rural bank arrears with the Central Bank.
Module II: Land Bank Counterpart Capital. Under this module an eligible rural bank is provided
access to Land Bank’s capital infusion program which involves the matching on a one-to-one
basis of rural bank’s fresh capital infusion. The Land Bank’s matching equity shall be in
preferred shares redeemable throughout a ten year period.
Module 111: Merger and Consolidation Incentives. This module seeks to promote mergers and
consolidations among banks as a means "to develop larger and stronger countryside financial
institutions." The incentives include, among others, a counterpart capital infusion by the Land
Bank by a ratio of more than one-to-one of the merged or consolidated bank’s total fresh equity
and a Philippine Deposit Insurance Corporation's Credit Facility to augment the capital infusion
required to absorb the adverse impact of asset write-downs and other costs of merger and
consolidation.
(1) exemption of voting stockholding of any person or persons related to each other
within the third degree of consanguinity or affinity, cooperatives or corporations participating
in the Program from the application of the prescribed equity ceilings as may be warranted; and
(2) waiver of penalties and other charges due on arrears covered by the Program.
The Rural Banks Act of 1990 was another important effort to address the problems of
the ailing rural banking system in the country. It provided for the conversion of supervised
credit past due and 50 percent of the non-supervised credit past due and restructured loans into
preferred shares of those government banks. The law also gives the rural banks powers to do
the following:
(1) open current or checking accounts, provided the rural bank has net assets of at least
P5 million and subject to guidelines set by the Monetary Board;
(2) act as official depository of municipal, city and provincial funds where the bank is
located;
(3) rediscount papers with the Philippine National Bank, the Land Bank or any other
banking institution; and
(4) invest in equities of allied undertakings such as the following:
Another important feature of the new view of rural finance and role of government is
the use of non-bank institutions such as nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), cooperatives
and self-h elp groups as credit channels. From the Aquino government on, NGOs and private
voluntary organizations (PVOs) have been recognized as credit conduits in the rural areas. The
Land Bank and the Department of Trade and Industry have tried to use them as credit conduits.
To reach rural borrowers and reduce its monitoring cost the Land Bank through the Integrated
Financing Program of the ACPC/CALF also used rural banks as lending conduits. The Land
Bank has become a wholesale banking institution and the rural banks, retail institutions.
However, the slow rehabilitation of the rural banks and the restrictive branching policy of the
Central Bank (at least prior to the recent branching policy reform discussed above) motivated
the Land Bank to consider using credit cooperatives and some NGOs as credit channels.
These organizations have shown some capability as credit conduits and savings
mobilizers. They have the advantage of having grass-root networks and peer pressure within
the organization, allowing them to reduce transaction costs, more efficiently screen borrowers
and assure loan repayment. Their link-up with the Land Bank allows the non-bank institutions
to undertake both savings and credit activities for their members. These organizations screen
or filter loan applications, instruct members on the rudiments of formal finance with a strong
emphasis on savings mobilization and loan repayment, and act as collection agents of the Land
Bank. A similar linking approach has been tried in Indonesia and has been reported to be a
workable scheme to deliver credit to small borrowers (see Seibel 1989).
2An objectionable feature of the Rural Banks Act of 1990 is the provision which mandates government financial
institutions to extend credit at concessional terms to rural banks. This is a policy reversal because it runs counter to the
market orientation of credit policy and discourages savings mobilization.
15
The assessment of the impact of agricultural-credit policies and programs under the new
approach in rural financial policies is a large undertaking and merits a serious and separate
study. I present only a preliminary assessment with focus on some of the principal on-going
credit programs to give an idea of the current state of agricultural credit and banking in the
Philippines after the reforms. First, I discuss the general status of agricultural credit and
banking in the Philippines. Secondly, I focus on the credit guarantees under the CALF, with
emphasis on the Integrated Rural Financing Program (IRF), the Agricultural Loan Fund (ALF)
and three special programs: the Livelihood Assistance for Agricultural Development (LEAD)
of the Department o f Agriculture and two experimental projects of the ACPC — the Grameen
Bank Replication and the Development Assistance Program for Cooperatives and Peoples’
Organizations (DAPCOPO). Although over the past five years credit decisions and allocation
were left to market forces operating in the financial system, the Grameen Replication and
DAPCOPO were implemented to initiate non-bankable groups such as landless farmers and
small fisherfolk into the formal credit system.
The projects are, therefore, timebound and intended to complement rather than substitute
for lending by formal financial institutions.3 One of their special characteristics is their use
of non-traditional and non-bank channels to provide credit to small rural borrowers. They focus
on non-bankable groups, especially those without access to formal credit. One innovation they
introduced is the conduct prior to loan availment of "social preparation" activities such as
capability or institution— building among target borrowers. These features differentiate these
programs in large measure from the credit program schemes during the 1970s and 1980s which
had little regard for social preparation or institution-building.
Table 7 shows the volume of Agricultural and non-agricultural loans provided by financial
institutions in 1986-1989. It is significant that the share of private banks in total agricultural
loans is relatively high. These private banks provided loans mostly to large corporations with
agribusiness activities and medium-size enterprises. Small-scale agricultural activities,
especially those o f small rural borrowers, are served by government banks and the rural banks.
4
Llanto (1990) and Alip et al. (1990) provide a detailed description o f the motivation and respective program designs
o f DAPCOPO and Grameen Replication.
16
TABLE 7
LOANS OUTSTANDING OF FINANCIAL INSTITUTION BY INDUSTRY
Average o f 1SSS-1QSQ
(In million poaos)
Agriculture 44,641.90 38.60 2,374.30 17.60 5,697.00 74.70 1,439.40 21.90 2.60 0.10
Commercial 19,038.3 a/ 16.50 1,902.20 14.10 788.00 10.30 (8.8) (0.1) 44.80 2.20
Real Estate 3,216.2 b/ 2.80 3,314.00 24.60 - - 574.20 8.80 128.70 6.20
Others 45,398.70 39.30 3.938.50 29.20 905.10 11.90 1,955.00 29.80 350.00 16.90
Total 115,598.70 100.00 13,478.30 99.00 7,627.30 100.00 6,558.60 100.00 2,074.70 100.00
Rural banks, which on average accounted for 10-13 percent of the total volume of loans
granted by die banking system as production loans to agriculture, has traditionally lent to
small-scale agriculture.
The recent countryside credit performance of the land Bank of the Philippines must be
mentioned. Because of the strategic shift and expansion in 1987 of the Land Bank’s credit
delivery approach, the Bank’s agricultural loans increased 10-fold from -F105.06 million in
1987 tof*2.8 billion in 1990 and to an estimated 1*5 billion agricultural loan portfolio by the end
of 1991. The Land Bank achieved its phenomenal growth in agricultural lending (principally
to small agrarian reform beneficiaries) by using cooperatives as loan conduits. It worked with
private groups to help organize these cooperatives which, according to its latest report, total
some 5,000. The growth in Land Bank’s agricultural credit was also due to its mandate to lend
to agrarian reform beneficiaries. By the end of 1990 the Land Bank delivered credit to 305,156
farmers through 2,879 cooperatives.4
Despite the recent growth in formal credit to agriculture, the informal sector continues
to be a critical feature of rural credit markets. The majority of rural borrowers in the
Philippines as in many developing countries has always depended on informal lenders.
Unfortunately there are no organized and systematic data on the informal lenders to help us
assess their relative importance to the agricultural sector. However, anecdotal evidence and
several local surveys point to their ability to operate in certain areas and for specific clientele
that banks fail to serve (Llanto 1990). The available evidence seems to show that informal
lenders serve a significant segment of the rural sector. The 1981-1982 TBAC Survey revealed
4The ACPC cautioned Land Bank about the sudden increase in the number o f cooperatives used as credit conduits.
Moral hazard problems exist in situations where access to credit is used to motivate the formation o f certain groups such
as cooperatives.
18
TABLE 8
AGRICULTURAL LOANS BY CO M M O DITY, 1 9 8 8 -1 9 9 0
(In million pesos at current prices)
- ......-.. .. -w.... Ift|. , •... ■ ... .
• ■ ihV:
Tatal Agricultu&l Loans ■
TABLE 9
AVERAGE VOLUME OF AGRICULTURAL/AGRICULTURE-RELATED
AND NON-AGRICULTURAL LOANS COVERED BY GUARANTEE, 1986-1990
TABLE 10
CUMULATIVE LOANS AND GUARANTEE PAYMENTS UNDER THE CALF
As of December 31,1991
(Amount in million pesos)
swjtii ■
Loans Beneficiaries a'artiapating Guarantee % to Loans
'; & s i:ion
s .l'i Generated Direct indirect . Payments Granted.
that about 59 percent of farmers who ever borrowed, sourced credit from informal lenders; 34
percent from formal institutions and about 4 percent from both formal and informal sources.
Even at the height of the government-sponsored credit programs before 1986, the great
bulk of farmers relied on informal loans (Llanto 1990). Table 11 is a summary of recent
information on the extent of borrowing from formal and informal sources as reported by several
researchers. In a 1987-1988 survey of farms, non-farms and landless households in Nueva
Ecija, Laguna, Quezon and Batangas provinces, the ACPC documented that as many as 94.4
percent of borrowers obtained informal loans.5 Floro and Yotopoulos (1991) observed that the
limited ability of the formal financial institutions to perform their major function of financial
intermediation in the rural areas and the endemic asymmetry in formal loan distribution in both
the agricultural and non-agricultural sectors leave a large vacuum in the rural credit markets
which is filled by informal lenders. The comparative advantage of informal lenders in the rural
areas has long been recognized in many countries. A survey done in 1978-1979 by the
Technical Board for Agricultural Credit (later reorganized as the ACPC) on informal rural
financial markets showed that moneylenders lent principally because of the borrowers’ good
credit standing and promise to pay. The high interest charges were viewed as premia for risks
and uncertainty. Compared to formal lenders the informal lenders are able to maintain high
loan repayment or lower loan default and low transaction cost. Recognizing this advantage,
government attempts to use informal lenders in rural credit delivery. The Quedancor, for
instance, has used the traders and millers with access to traditional banking as credit conduits.
The Quedancor provided a guarantee to these traders/millers who, after getting a bank loan,
provided credit to their small farmer-clientele. The results motivated the Land Bank to use
NGOs and cooperatives as credit conduits to deliver credit to numerous small borrowers.
1. CALF-Guarantee Program
PCIC-CALF Program
5See the Rural Savings Mobilization Survey (1986) and the Informal Credit Survey (1987-1988) o f the Agricultural
Credit Policy Council.
21
TABLE 11
EXTENT OF BORROWING FROM FORMAL AND INFORMAL
SOURCES IN THE PHILIPPINES
Credit Source
Numberof loans/ ; 1' Formal ' Irilbr■
ma.
farmer-Borrowers ' (Percent)
In 1991, the PCIC-CALF guarantee scheme underwent some changes to expand services:
Table 10 shows that in 1987-1991, the PCIC-CALF was able to generate a total of P I ,3
billion in loans under guarantee, benefiting 127,081 direct beneficiaries. Guarantee payments
for the same period amounted to only P13.4 million or 1 percent of the total amount
guaranteed. The PCIC works with 512 participating rural financial institutions.
Quedan-CALF Program
The Quedancor-CALF guarantee enables local traders, millers, cooperatives and small
farmers to deposit grain in franchised bonded warehouses against which a negotiable warehouse
receipt called the quedan is issued. The quedan can be used as collateral to bank loans. The
CALF guarantees up to 80 percent of the outstanding loan extended by the bank.
GFSME-CALF Program
The GFSME was established in 1983 to stimulate credit flows to small and medium
enterprises by providing credit guarantee to bank loans. The CALF uses the GFSME to provide
guarantee to rural-based entrepreneurs. The guarantee is up to 85 percent of the outstanding
loan. Total cumulative loans generated by GFSME—CALF amount to P307 million, benefiting
directly 349 groups and indirectly 61,975 individuals. It works with 20 participating rural
financial institutions. Guarantee payments in 1987-1991 amounted to P7.2 million or 3 percent
of total loans granted (Table 10).
Introduced as a pilot financing project in 1983, IRF uses the credit-line approach to
financing smallholder agriculture. It is jointly managed by the ACPC and the Land Bank of the
Philippines and has two distinct features:
23
(1) a comprehensive credit-line type of financing open to rural banks and cooperatives
through the Land Bank’s rediscounting window; and
(2) an institutional-development component focused on organizing and strengthening
small farmers’ groups.
The latter component is implemented through NGOs. The farmers are trained in basic
enterprise management and bookkeeping skills and, more important, value formation, prior to
actual availment of bank credit.
(1) to support multiple and diversified farming systems and integrated farm financing to
spread risks in lending;
(2) to encourage development of viable small home or rural industries linked to the main
livelihood of the community or farm household; and
(3) to simplify and systematize the lending process between banks and borrowers.
Following the transfer of supervision of IRF from Central Bank to Land Bank in 1989,
some changes were made. Instead of the old strategy of granting special time deposits (STDs)
to rural financial institutions (RFIs), the modified IRF uses the Land Bank’s rediscounting
window to provide loans. This means that the rural banks and cooperatives have to originate
promissory notes which they then rediscount with the Land Bank. The old approach placed
STDs at the disposal of the banks which they in turn lent to small borrowers. Another
significant modification in the IRF is the institution-building component. Farmersare organized
into groups and cooperatives in order to facilitate credit delivery bythe LandBank. While the
old IRF lent to individual farmer-borrowers, the modified IRF recognizes the role of NGOs in
preparing and training farmers in credit management and uses group lending as a strategy to
deliver credit to farmers.
A recent evaluation done by the ACPC (1992) revealed that the rural financial
institutions (RFIs) participating in the IRF increased their client outreach as evidenced by a
significant growth in the number of agricultural borrowers. Also, compared to other lending
schemes, IRF lending is more cost-effective. A summary report of the program as of end 1991
follows:
Established in 1985, the Agricultural Loan Fund (now known as the Countryside Loan
Fund) was administered by the Central Bank prior to its transfer to the Land Bank by virtue of
Monetary Board Resolution No. 246 (27 March 1989). The transfer was mainly due to the
24
decision to steer the Central Bank away from providing development finance and to focus it on
its primary tasks of monetary management and stabilization. The Land Bank was selected to
administer the fund because it is oriented towards development finance.
The ALF was to provide credit to finance seasonal production credit and private-sector
investments in fixed assets and working capital. In keeping with current policy directions,
interest rates were market-determined. Moreover, no specific allocation of funds by crop or
type of investment or to any targeted group of borrowers was made. The ALF used commercial
banks, unibanks, rural banks, thrift banks and non-bank financial institutions to deliver credit.
The accreditation of participating private financial institutions was based on the following:
A limitation on each bank’s credit line was also imposed. Banks are further required to
open an account (with no minimum balance requirement) with the Land Bank.
According to a study made by SGV in 1991, the program was relatively successful in
meeting its principal objectives and that the Central Bank was generally efficient in releasing
the funds. The other indicators of the relative success of the program are the following:
The ALF was instrumental in providing agricultural credit for rural development. In
1989, the peak year of ALF lending, loan disbursements went as high as 7 percent of loans
provided by the banking sector to agriculture. A follow-up project — the Countryside Loan
Fund (CLF) -- has just been made possible through a US$200-million loan from the World
Bank. The' Land Bank will channel loans through participating financial institutions. The main
focus will be loans for agricultural and non-farm rural investments. Loans will also be made
for seasonal production and for investments in fixed assets and incremental working capital.
25
The LEAD program was launched by the DA in May 1988 mainly to improve the
bankability of organized rural groups whose access to formal credit is constrained by lack of
track record, absence of collateral and lack of project management capability, among others.
It extends services and assistance to organized rural groups as well as to NGOs and agribusiness
entrepreneurs. The package of assistance focuses on facilitating access to the banks or link-up
with banks for marketing, credit support, project development and institution-building. A unique
feature is the commitment of a private organization, the Management Association of the
Philippines (MAP), to provide project managers and consultants to the assisted project for a
period of one to two years.
(1) the more progressive and bankable farmers who lack managerial expertise and market
contacts; and
(2) the non-bankable farmers who do not have collateral or the track record to get bank
loans.
(1) the bank-assisted component for the first type of clientele; and
(2) the grant-assisted component for the second type.
The DA refers the bankable farmer to banks for loans and to private businesses for
marketing and management purposes. The grant-assisted component provides start-up funds for
income—generating projects and supplemental budgets. Since 1988 the DA has used LEAD to
provide livelihood assistance to farmers and fisherfolk in 13 regions, 77 provinces and more
than 1,500 municipalities of the country. Available data over the past four years indicate the
following:
- As of end 1991, a total of 2,928 projects have been generated, serving approximately
218,000 individual farmers/fishermen representing around 3,000 groups.
- Total financial assistance disbursed amounted to P325 million distributed almost
equally between bank-assisted and grant-assisted proponents.
- By project type, as much as 41 percent of the total disbursements went to crop
production, followed by fisheries and livestock/poultry projects sharing 16
percent and 14 percent, respectively.
- Location-wise, Region III appeared to be the biggest recipient of LEAD assistance,
cornering nearly one-third, followed by Regions II and VII, each sharing about
13 percent, while the least served is Region I, receiving barely 2 percent of total
disbursements along with Region VIII and the Cordillera Autonomous Region.
- Overall program recovery rate, however, stood at a low 7 percent.
26
This program was established in May 1990 to provide credit financing to non-bankable
agri-based groups not serviced by banking institutions. The idea is to eventually bring these
small farmers or their cooperatives and similar organizations into the mainstream of the
financial system through their collaboration with the mature and viable rural-based, non-bank
financial intermediaries like credit cooperatives and credit unions. As of end December 1991,
the program has accomplished the following:
This project seeks to test an alternative credit-delivery mechanism for the poorest of the
poor, among whom are coconut farmers and coastal fishermen. The prime objective is to uplift
the economic status of the marginalized poor through a mechanism that will extend financial
assistance for viable projects and enforce savings mobilization among members, proceeds of
which will be utilized to meet the emergency needs of the beneficiaries.
- extended grants/assistance to ten NGOs and three cooperative rural banks amounting
to £700,000, and loans amounting to £3 million;
- serviced a total of 1,929 individual beneficiaries from 394 groups (i.e., loans averaged
£2,074 per beneficiary);
- conducted four intensive training courses, one orientation seminar and one review
conference attended by 12, 40 and 6 participating organizations, respectively;
- installed monitoring and evaluation systems in all the 13 project replicators.
While the loan amounts involved and the initial project reach of both DAPCOPO and
the Grameen Project may not look spectacular, it must be borne in mind that the target clientele
are the non-bankable sectors of Philippine rural economy: landless peasants, coconut farmers
and small fisherfolk who obviously can not access credit from banks. The poverty focus of these
programs sets them apart from the lending programs moved by government to the banks such
as the ALF and the IRF.
6A11 assessment figures are from the Evaluation Studies on the IRF and the LEAD Programs conducted by the
ACPC under the author’s supervision in the last quarter of 1991.
28
formal credit, it cannot be denied that access remains relatively small compared to the
bank-loan share of commercial and big borrowers in both the agricultural and non-agricultural
sectors. So while the programs and the new rural credit policies may have introduced
efficiency in rural credit markets, the response of the formal system to the agricultural and rural
sector remains weak. The formal financial system continues to be urban and trade- or
commercially oriented. The commercial banks prefer to provide mainly short-term fully secured
loans.
This view is consistent with the results of the assessment of the CALF guarantee
program done by Llanto et al. (1991) which indicated several interesting results. The credit
guarantees have yet to make a dent in banks’ lending decisions. The presence or absence of
a credit guarantee does not seem to be a major factor in the bank’s decision to lend. In addition,
the credit guarantee does not minimize the need for the usual collateral asked for by the banks.
Levitsky and Prassad (1987) observed the same in similar guarantee institutions in many
developing countries. The problem lies in bringing the private banks into the guarantee
program and making them less risk-averse in lending to small borrowers.
The evaluation further noted that both guaranteed and non-guaranteed loans required the
same length of processing time and collateral. However, the rationale of the CALF is not
completely ignored by the banks. Some of the surveyed banks claimed that there is a need for
credit-guarantee schemes in rural credit markets. These banks believed that the credit-guarantee
scheme can work for the small farmer-borrower but that it is not sufficient to influence the
bank’s decision to lend.
Another reason why most banks do not find the guarantee programs attractive is that
lending under the guarantee scheme is more costly and demands more administrative work than
conventional lending programs (Llanto et al. 1991 and Magno and Meyer 1988). This may be
true of the GFSME which spends about 14 centavos per peso of loan guaranteed compared to
the cost of 7 centavos per peso granted by other lending programs. Quedancor has managed
to keep its administrative costs at a low level of 3 centavos for every loan guaranteed between
1979 and 1989 but mainly because it catered to the large borrowers. PCIC spends
approximately 2 centavos for every peso of loan guaranteed.
The experimental projects offer a fresh tack to rural lending but these are hampered by
severe problems. In the first place, the transaction and administrative costs of these approaches
are high because of the nature of the target clientele. The effort is labor-intensive and requires
painstaking monitoring and constant evaluation of strategies and impact. The experimental
projects envisage in the future the non-bankable borrowers gaining a track record and
developing the capability to deal directly with banks and formal finance. At best, however, it
remains a dream given the present orientation of the Philippine banking system and the
depressed state of the rural economy.
The present time-bound strategic interventions such as the DAPCOPO and Grameen
must be aware of the problems that arose in the past government-directed credit programs. As
these credit programs proliferated came the problem of uncoordinated implementation. Past
credit programs usually constituted an interagency management committee at the national level
29
for each program created. The committee largely acted as overall program coordinator,
providing direction, making decisions, monitoring and evaluating the performance of the
program as implemented by the executing agency (normally either a financing institution or
another government agency). As the number of management committees expanded (one for each
of about 50 special programs eventually established), the overall coordination and
administration of the credit programs became costly and immensely difficult. The ultimate
results were the following:
Under the present system, a management committee oversees each special program.
Although mechanisms keep these committees as small and coordinated as possible, the lessons
of the past must not be lost on the program implementors. It is instructive to consider whether
the programs are cost effective.
Considering the amount of administrative and operational expenses so far infused into
the IRF, LEAD, DAPCOPO and Grameen programs, the cost per peso of loan granted has been
estimated by the ACPC to range from 10 to 28 centavos. The relatively much lower
administrative cost of IRF (an average of 10 centavos for every peso of loan granted) was
attributed largely to the credit-line financing approach which systematized the lending process,
reduced paperwork, lessened processing time and consequently cut down the transaction costs.
No other credit program for small farmers aside from the IRF seems to have been more
successful in delivering credit to small rural borrowers. On the other hand, because the
Grameen catered to disadvantaged groups, administrative costs were estimated at 23 centavos
for every peso of loan delivered to clients.
In the past 20 years of implementing lending programs, the Central Bank, which
administered most of the treasury-funded programs, spent on the average only about 3 centavos
for every peso of STD extended. While this may appear low, the cost of collecting bad debts
and the foregone earnings arising from them are not included in the estimated cost. It should
be noted that DAPCOPO and Grameen are experimental and innovative and, therefore, incur
social development and preparation costs. However, sustainability of credit programs requires
the ability to more than cover the operating and administrative costs from the lending activities
of these programs.
These experiments, while showing that the marginal groups can save and are good
borrowers, cannot really take the place of the banking system insofar as financial intermediation
is concerned. The banking system has the financial resources which it generates from all over
the country and the expertise in a wide variety of financial transactions that can benefit the rural
economy. The irony is that the banking system mobilizes the rural surplus which is used to
finance urban investments. The challenge to policymakers and development practitioners is,
therefore, how to reorient the urban bias and the preference of the banking system for trade
30
and commerce without losing sight of the emerging attempts by self-help groups, NGOs and
PVOs to engage in rural financial intermediation.
The financial reforms introduced more efficiency in the rural financial markets.
Market-oriented financial policies eliminated excess demand for credit and induced banks to be
more efficient in their intermediation functions. Savings mobilization is now emphasized.
Various agents in the rural financial markets innovate to access the rural surplus in view of the
strong message that the era of cheap money is over (see Llanto 1991). I propose that
government consider the following policy reforms.
(1) Create an environment o f greater competition in rural financial markets. The Central
Bank’s recent move to liberalize branching and bank-entry policy is laudable. The establishment
of more branches and new banks will lead to more competitive interest rates in the rural areas.
Positive incentives like increasing the number of services that private banks can offer in the
rural areas will induce more private banks into these areas. To induce more private banking into
the rural areas, there is also a need to review the role and current strategies in countryside
banking of government banks like the Land Bank and the remaining non-financial government
institutions which still have direct lending activities. While the Land Bank has had some
success in providing access to a great number of rural borrowers, it does this through credit
subsidies, notwithstanding the present market-orientation of credit policy.
(2) Promote vigorous resource mobilization. A more active role in resource mobilization
by private banks may be expected if they are allowed to provide more banking services like
checking accounts in the rural areas. Overdependence on the government’s credit facilities does
not make for competitive rural banking. Private banks’ attempts to mobilize savings must be
given due support and recognition. The resources generated by self-help groups, peoples’
organizations, credit unions and cooperatives as source of intermediation funds must be
explored by private banks. Various types of financial innovations are emerging from the effort
of these self-help groups and peoples’ organizations all over Southeast Asian rural financial
markets, and it would be instructive for governments and private banks to consider these
innovations in resource-mobilization campaigns (see Llanto 1992b).
govemment-lender and borrowers and the absence of operational monitoring and feedback
mechanisms are reasons that militate against this approach.
(4) Move away from loan quotas as a strategy to ensure loans to target groups.
Philippine experience with the agriculture and agrarian reform loan-quota is instructive. Instead
of increasing loans to those sectors, the loan-quota law increased the banks’ intermediation cost
and thus, the lending rates. An incentive structure and a policy environment that make lending
to the agriculture and rural sectors profitable will encourage more bank lending. The sad fact
is, however, that there has been recent legislation imposing more loan quotas in favor of certain
target beneficiaries.
(5) Strengthen the CALF guarantee institutions. The credit-guarantee scheme reduces the
loan default risks faced by banks. Our assessment points out certain weaknesses and difficulties
in implementing the. guarantee schemes. Policymakers must review the operational structure
of the CALF and the program management in each of the guarantee institutions so that the
risk-reducing element of the credit guarantee will take precedence over the security and
collateral orientation of the banking system. The common experience with the guarantee is that
the bank tries to get the guarantee cover in addition to the collateral it requires from the small
borrower. However, Llanto and Casuga (1992) documented evidence that the CALF guarantee
has been used by a private development bank as a device to secure part of their loan exposure
to small farmers without demanding from them additional security or collateral.
The Quedancor, originally created to deal with local traders and millers, has recently
tried to shift its focus to small farmers and cooperatives at the direction of the ACPC. It is now
a stock corporation and can raise equity capital from private investors and provide credit
guarantee to a wider set of economic and business activities such as production inputs, farm
equipment, post-harvest facilities, working capital and inventory. However, its current charter
allows it to provide direct loans to the agricultural and rural sector and to engage in a host of
functions more ably performed by banking institutions. Based on my earlier arguments against
direct lending by non-financial government institutions, those provisions allowing Quedancor
to engage in direct lending must be reviewed.
Quedancor should also improve its financial position by charging guarantee fees that
cover operating costs and expected losses. By providing inventory finance to small farmers and
cooperatives the Quedancor would help make interest rates more competitive in the rural
financial markets. The PCIC reaches the small borrower but because it is undercapitalized it
does not realize its full potential impact on rural financial markets. It needs more capital
infusion from the government. It must also recognize variable rates to cover risk differentials
in the different regions of the Philippines. GFSME has a small capital base and a lean
organization that prevent it from reaching more borrowers. It is not a legal entity, being a mere
program under another government corporation. The GFSME has to review its operating
procedures and policies to assure sustainability of programs and consistency with overall
agricultural credit policy. It must be strengthened and formally organized.
(6) Co-opting the informal lender? I pose this as a question because of unresolved issues
surrounding informal credit. The popular image of the informal lender is that of a monopolist
32
who only immiserizes the small borrower. Others view informal credit as a complement rather
than a substitute for formal credit, with a certain utility of its own given the nuances and
problems in rural credit markets. This is an area of policy study which offers tremendous
payoffs in terms of policy decisions and the data base about informal markets that will be
generated. To take advantage of the greater flexibility and comparative advantage of informal
lenders in the rural financial markets, there may be scope for seeking a wider and deeper
linkage between the formal sector and the informal sector. These efforts, according to the ADB
(1990), can be directed towards breaking down barriers to entry in the rural financial markets,
weakening the monopoly powers of some informal lenders by increasing credit outlets offering
variegated loan terms, and increasing the amount of financial resources available to the informal
sector. Present experimental projects of the ACPC and those implemented by NGOs and PVOs
with or without the collaboration of government agencies must be examined to find out whether
the contemplated approach is indeed both workable and sustainable.
V. CONCLUSION
This paper discusses agricultural credit and banking in the Philippines and suggests
certain courses of action to improve both efficiency and access issues in rural financial markets.
The importance of financial-market reforms cannot be overemphasized. Formal financial
institutions respond to the perceived loan default and other risks in the agriculture and rural
areas, the transaction costs and informational problems that surround rural lending by lending
to the more viable, less risky and bigger borrowers who can also offer better security for the
loan. The financial reforms did not change the peculiar characteristics of rural credit
transactions such as the inherent risks, asymmetry of information and huge transaction costs.
While the financial reforms introduced efficiency, a concomitant set of actions must be
undertaken to make agriculture and rural lending viable. This concerns the need for social and
institutional infrastructure that the special programs like the IRF showed to be important in
keeping the integrity of loan contracts. Adequate irrigation, communication and transportation
facilities, in short, the support systems that will make agriculture and rural enterprise viable
and profitable must be present to ensure access to financial services.
At the macroeconomic level, interest rates are greatly influenced by the pressure from
the large fiscal deficit. Because of the government’s inability to raise the tax revenues to cover
its expenditure programs, it borrows heavily from domestic loan markets, raising interest rates
in rural credit markets. In addition, the oligopolistic character of the local banking industry
strongly influences the level of interest rates. Clearly, introducing fiscal reforms and greater
competition in the banking industry are necessary.
33
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